Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
AMD Intel Hardware

AMD Reveals Zen 2 Processor Architecture in Bid To Stay Ahead of Intel (venturebeat.com) 100

AMD on Monday revealed the Zen 2 architecture for the family of processors that it will launch in the coming years, starting with 2019. The move is a follow-up to the competitive Zen designs that AMD launched in March 2017, and it promises two-times improvement in performance throughput. From a report: AMD hopes the Zen 2 processors will keep it ahead of or at parity with Intel, the world's biggest maker of PC processors. The earlier Zen designs enabled chips that could process 52 percent more instructions per clock cycle than the previous generation. Zen has spawned AMD's most competitive chips in a decade, including Ryzen for the desktop, Threadripper (with up to 32 cores) for gamers, Ryzen Mobile for laptops, and Epyc for servers. In the future, you can expect to see Zen 2 cores in future models of those families of chips. AMD's focus is on making central processing units (CPUs), graphics processing units (GPUs), and accelerated processing units (APUs) that put the two other units together on the same chip.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

AMD Reveals Zen 2 Processor Architecture in Bid To Stay Ahead of Intel

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @03:10PM (#57601410)

    I am glad to see competition, and will consider these for computational requirements in the future.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Keep up the good work !

      Now if software design can catch up to 64 Core, 128 thread hardware...

      Not every program benefits from multicore design.

      LOWER PRICES are the most important innovation, along with cooler power saving CPUs.

  • by OwP_Fabricated ( 717195 ) <fabricated&gmail,com> on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @03:16PM (#57601462)

    ...which will probably be to just rebrand another golden-bin set of 14nm+++++++++++ Xeons and just push the clocks even harder so they can claim 10% more FPS on some insanely shitty 1-2 threaded benchmark game if you don't mind a processor that draws 350W+ under full load and needs to dissipate more heat per square inch than a nuclear reactor.

    Also it'll have a new socket and cost like $900+, because lol fuck you

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Their response was yesterday, where they said they were going to glue a couple Xeons together to get a 48 core processor.

      • by OwP_Fabricated ( 717195 ) <fabricated&gmail,com> on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @03:23PM (#57601530)

        Remember like 6 months ago when they literally had a presentation saying that Zen was "glued together" processors and that was bad?

    • Lol it would be funny if you weren't right. While each successive "generation" from Intel in the last 4 years have always had least some IPC improvement, it's been very small. And they've been on 14nm since Broadwell. Skylake, Kabylake and now Coffeelake are all the same chip, more or less. Any gains have simply come from small clock speed increases, more cache, and general optimizations. I will say though that at least the desktop chips have kept the power draw under control. But the HEDT chips, the most r
  • The reality is..... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by fred911 ( 83970 )

    "The move is a follow-up to"...

    Attempt to justify a PE ratio of better than 43x when the industry avg is 17x!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      So you are complaining that AMD stock is not as good a buy as Intel? I'd take that bet, but so what?

      If the Intel margins are higher to justify the stock price, that just means AMD chips are an even better value. So go ahead slashies, buy AMD chips and intel stock. Or maybe just buy AMD.

      The new Ryzen laptops for $500 are not bad btw as far as shitbox graphics go. Personally I rock that little $350 tron Lenovo for portability, and an ageing 965 that will tide me over until it dies and then grab a 1060 $900 e

      • by fred911 ( 83970 )

        "So you are complaining"
        No, I'm not complaining. I'm just stating a fact that it trades at a much, much higher value than either the industry or Intel (@10.93x). I've been rooting for AMD since my DX40 was priced better and outperformed intel's chip/set.

        But, they've always underperformed as a company. From their pricing, it looks like there's quite the hope they won't blow it yet again (how many times is it now?). From a historical standpoint, and at this point, I don't see any value in them

      • Intel and AMD have nearly identical price/sales.
    • by melted ( 227442 )

      PE is largely a factor of potential growth. AMD has _plenty_ of room to grow. If anything, if EPYC really takes off (and it might), their PE might be too low at the moment.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    "Threadripper (with up to 32 cores) for gamers" Hardly a "gamers" CPU, workstation makes the most sense for threadripper.

    • Threadripper has the pci-e lanes to drive multi cards and yes the X8 does limit the high end video cards.

      • by Kjella ( 173770 )

        Threadripper has the pci-e lanes to drive multi cards and yes the X8 does limit the high end video cards.

        Just barely, but SLI/CF was niche to begin with and has almost disappeared which makes it often poorly supported/tested. I was foolish enough to try it with two GTX 970s and after annoying crashes and resets back to single card mode in the few games it actually gave a good boost I sold one, re-purposed the other and got a 1080 Ti instead. I'd not recommend dual cards if a single card was at all possible, like anything under a $1500 GPU budget I'd rather get a factory overclocked 2080 Ti.

        Threadripper has som

      • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

        Except multiple cards rarely works well for gaming, many games don't support SLI at launch and gamers aren't the kind who like to wait a couple of months just to see if maybe their system gets supported. So SLI is niche even amongst gamers who would happily fork out for it. Not to mention that even when SLI does wortk it often doesn't scale well for anything other than benchmarks.

    • by edwdig ( 47888 )

      Threadripper doesn't help much when PLAYING games, but it'd be a pretty sweet CPU for COMPILING games.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      "Threadripper (with up to 32 cores) for gamers" Hardly a "gamers" CPU, workstation makes the most sense for threadripper.

      And what a workstation it would be.

      My personal desktop is an AMD 8-core. Right now I have Chrome, Firefox, Opera, a virtual machine, iTunes and a couple of other things running. I need to update to 32GB of RAM because 16GB is getting a little tight, and from time to time I could use more CPU capacity.

      At work I have almost maxed out my memory, and occasionally when I'm using Excel to cru

      • by mikael ( 484 )

        There are dual socket motherboards with quad-SLI and up to 128GB ECC memory intended for desktop supercomputing. Dual socket AMD or Intel CPU's. Some will need an extra larger case (EATX).

        • There are dual socket motherboards with quad-SLI and up to 128GB ECC memory intended for desktop supercomputing. Dual socket AMD or Intel CPU's. Some will need an extra larger case (EATX).

          A Threadripper based PC would handle this without needing dual socket. link [amazon.com]

  • pci-e 4 or 5?

  • Competition (Score:5, Insightful)

    by PeeAitchPee ( 712652 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @03:34PM (#57601646)
    Whether you love or hate Intel or AMD (or, like me, are neutral and use the right tool for the job), you gotta love that we've finally got some CPU competition again. This will only accelerate the development of better tech and drive prices down.
  • by Only Time Will Tell ( 5213883 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @03:35PM (#57601656)
    I'm looking forward to seeing some of the specs and benchmarks that these new cores can reach. My old compy is now just about end of life (it's a second-gen i5, almost 8 years old), so next year is perfect timing for AMD and Intel be in a price and performance war!
  • by MojoKid ( 1002251 ) * on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @04:18PM (#57602036)
    Live benchmark recorded here versus a dual-socket Xeon Platinum 8180 server: https://hothardware.com/news/a... [hothardware.com]
  • More like Ryzen for gamers and ThreadRipper for desktops; the people who still need one.

    If you buy just for gaming while you could buy ThreadRipper most won't and it wouldn't give the best performance for your money (but be superior for streaming, then again you could buy say an i5 9600K and a Ryzen 5 2600 for gaming and streaming.

  • Would perform as swift.

    Paraphrazing the Bard*

    The northbridge is BACK BABY!!!!!!!
    Party like it is the early 00's all over again!!!!!!

    On a more serious note:

    I think that AMD's Integrated northbridge is so big not only because is manufactured in 14nm, but also because it houses not only IO and Memory controller, but also a combination of L3 Cache and Integrated graphics.

    I foresee that this northbridge will have two families. One with all L3 and no graphics for Epyc and Threadripper, and one with less L3 and in

Never ask two questions in a business letter. The reply will discuss the one you are least interested, and say nothing about the other.

Working...